Good Medicine
What does it look like to be in the room — and sometimes at the center of the fire — for every major public health crisis of the last 50 years? Dr. Anthony Fauci, former Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and advisor to seven U.S. Presidents, joins Dr. Rohan Ramakrishna for a sweeping conversation that spans a Brooklyn pharmacy, the first AIDS wards, the Situation Room, and the front lines of COVID.Dr. Fauci traces the unlikely arc from delivering prescriptions on a Schwinn bike in Bensonhurst to architecting PEPFAR — the most successful global health program in history, credited with saving 26 million lives. He reflects candidly on his famous adversarial-turned-collaborative relationship with activist Larry Kramer, how that changed the way clinical trials are run in America, and why the scientific community needs a louder collective voice. He also addresses the Great Barrington Declaration, the vitriol of the COVID years, and what it means — as both a physician and a public servant — to tell the truth when people don't want to hear it. And he shares his deep concern about what's happening right now to the institutions he spent a lifetime building.New episodes are released every other week, wherever you get your podcasts. If you’re a US-based physician, continue the conversation with Dr. Fauci on Roon, visit: www.roon.com Find us on Instagram and X: @roondoctors If you have a question, comment, or suggestion for a future guest, please email us: jane@roon.care -- (00:00) Intro (02:54) Welcome — Dr. Anthony Fauci (03:12) Growing up in Brooklyn: A family pharmacy and a calling (05:52) The Classics, the Jesuits, and a philosophy degree (07:43) Why he chose the NIH over private practice (10:38) Early career: Vasculitides and the bench-to-bedside approach (11:05) How treating rare autoimmune disease shaped his HIV work (13:41) The first AIDS patients at the NIH (1981) (15:07) Pivoting his career entirely to HIV/AIDS (18:06) Becoming director of NIAID — a job he didn't want (20:31) Advising seven presidents: The feeling of the Oval Office (21:30) The moment Bush commissioned PEPFAR (22:59) PEPFAR: 26 million lives saved (24:41) The contrast with today's global health commitments (27:06) The Godfather, Bethesda, and the secret PEPFAR meeting (31:16) PEPFAR's uncertain future under the current administration (34:12) Can other countries fill the U.S. funding gap? (36:20) Larry Kramer and the HIV activist community (39:00) Listening instead of running: The decision that changed everything (40:40) How activism permanently changed clinical trials and the FDA (44:33) Is an HIV vaccine possible? (46:30) The tools we already have to end the epidemic (48:34) COVID: How quickly mRNA became the obvious platform (50:41) Lessons from Operation Warp Speed (52:59) Buying doses before knowing if the vaccine worked (53:53) What the Great Barrington Declaration got fundamentally wrong (57:15) Handling years of personal attacks and vitriol (1:00:05) Did the broader medical community let him down? (1:01:40) The need for doctors to speak up — measles as a warning (1:02:38) An impassioned defense of the NIH (1:04:21) Quick Hits: Book recommendations (1:05:47) Most impactful mentor: Sheldon Wolff (1:06:29) Most inspiring leader: Nelson Mandela (1:07:16) Closing
14 episodios
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